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British climbers’ xenon gas Everest shortcut: Revolution or threat to mountaineering?

Four British climbers, early this month, scaled Mount Everest and returned home, all within a week, thanks to a new and controversial method involving the inhalation of xenon gas.

May 28, 2025 / 13:43 IST
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The climbers, part of an expedition led by Furtenbach, left London on May 16 and reportedly stood atop the world’s highest peak on May 21.

“You do not climb a mountain like Everest by trying to race ahead on your own, or by competing with your comrades. You do it slowly and carefully, by unselfish teamwork. Certainly, I wanted to reach the top by myself; it was the one thing that I had dreamed of all my life. But if the lot fell to someone else, I would take it like a man, and not a crybaby. For that is the mountain way," Sherpa Tenzing Norgay had once said, capturing the enduring spirit of traditional mountaineering.

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A recent expedition has, nevertheless, pushed that belief to the edge.

In a feat that has stunned the global mountaineering community, four British climbers recently scaled Mount Everest and returned home, all within a week, thanks to a new and controversial method involving the inhalation of xenon gas.